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99,900 | It provided full pipeline delay management and optimization, and a consistent API for programming imaging hardware. Key software programmers were brought on: Ken Woodland, Stephen Watkins and Ari Berman. Recognizing that not every imaging function could be best done in a pipeline, Siegel teamed with Analog Devices new ... | Datacube Inc. | 0.776525 |
99,901 | A Modular and expandable system based on the VMEbus form factor could meet many customer needs. MaxVideo and the MaxBus were born. Marketing research determined the primary functions required and a road map for the next few years. The first seven MaxVideo boards were Digimax (digitizer and display), Framestore (triple ... | Datacube Inc. | 0.776525 |
99,902 | For its first two years, CSET plans to focus on the intersection of security and artificial intelligence (AI), particularly on national competitiveness, talent and knowledge flows and relationships with other technologies. CSET is the largest center in the U.S. focused on AI and policy. | Center for Security and Emerging Technology | 0.776523 |
99,903 | On the other hand, by the special theorem for compact operators, H is the orthogonal direct sum of the eigenspaces of A, all finite-dimensional except possibly for the 0 eigenspace. Since RA = K* R, the image under R of the λ eigenspace of A lies in the λ eigenspace of K*. Similarly R carries the λ eigenspace of K into... | Symmetrizable compact operator | 0.776522 |
99,904 | The generalized version of this theorem was first proved by Kazlow (1979), also proved by Boivin and Dwilewicz (1998) under more less complicated hypothese. Theorem Let ω {\displaystyle \omega } be a connected submanifold of R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} of class- C 2 {\displaystyle C^{2}} . Then every continuou... | Bochner's tube theorem | 0.77652 |
99,905 | In mathematics, Bochner's tube theorem (named for Salomon Bochner) shows that every function holomorphic on a tube domain in C n {\displaystyle \mathbb {C} ^{n}} can be extended to the convex hull of this domain. Theorem Let ω ⊂ R n {\displaystyle \omega \subset \mathbb {R} ^{n}} be a connected open set. Then every fun... | Bochner's tube theorem | 0.77652 |
99,906 | The Triple Phase Boundary (TPB) length, which is the length where porous, ionic and electronically conducting pathways all meet, directly relates to the electrochemically active length in the cell. The larger the length, the more reactions can occur and thus the less the activation polarization. Optimization of TPB len... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,907 | The activation polarization is the result of the kinetics involved with the electrochemical reactions. Each reaction has a certain activation barrier that must be overcome in order to proceed and this barrier leads to the polarization. The activation barrier is the result of many complex electrochemical reaction steps ... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,908 | Unlike most other types of fuel cells, SOFCs can have multiple geometries. The planar fuel cell design geometry is the typical sandwich type geometry employed by most types of fuel cells, where the electrolyte is sandwiched in between the electrodes. SOFCs can also be made in tubular geometries where either air or fuel... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,909 | Thermal expansion demands a uniform and well-regulated heating process at startup. SOFC stacks with planar geometry require on the order of an hour to be heated to operating temperature. Micro-tubular fuel cell design geometries promise much faster start up times, typically in the order of minutes. | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,910 | Also, the 3D printing technique allows the cell layers to be printed on top of each other instead of having to go through separate manufacturing and stacking steps. The thickness is easy to control, and layers can be made in the exact size and shape that is needed, so waste is minimized.Ceres Power Ltd. has developed a... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,911 | This manufacturing technique would allow SOFC cell structure to be more flexible, which could lead to more efficient designs. This process could work in the production of any part of the cell. The 3D printing process works by combining about 80% ceramic particles with 20% binders and solvents, and then converting that ... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,912 | A high-temperature SOFC will generate all of the needed electricity to allow the engine to be smaller and more efficient. The SOFC would run on the same gasoline or diesel as the engine and would keep the air conditioning unit and other necessary electrical systems running while the engine shuts off when not needed (e.... | Solid Oxide Fuel Cell | 0.776519 |
99,913 | The final target of study for this group was the medical students they taught. Medical students at Ohio State University, Ohio University and Northeast Ohio Medical College were invited to serve as subjects. Students indicating a preference for the specialties of family practice, psychiatry, pediatrics and obstetrics-g... | Non verbal communication | 0.776519 |
99,914 | In mathematics, the Andreotti–Frankel theorem, introduced by Aldo Andreotti and Theodore Frankel (1959), states that if V {\displaystyle V} is a smooth, complex affine variety of complex dimension n {\displaystyle n} or, more generally, if V {\displaystyle V} is any Stein manifold of dimension n {\displaystyle n} , the... | Andreotti–Frankel theorem | 0.776519 |
99,915 | The society meets regularly on Thursday evenings in the Godlee Observatory, with the exception of Public Lecture evenings (see below) and the Christmas closure of the University building. These meetings consist of observing using the telescopes (weather permitting), informal talks and discussion sessions.The society ho... | Manchester Astronomical Society | 0.776519 |
99,916 | Using 3D printing and multi-material structures in additive manufacturing has allowed for the design and creation of what is called 4D printing. 4D printing is an additive manufacturing process in which the printed object changes shape with time, temperature, or some other type of stimulation. 4D printing allows for th... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,917 | It is therefore an additional object of the invention to minimize use to materials in a process of the indicated class. It is a further object of the invention that materials employed in such a process be salvaged for reuse. According to another aspect of the invention, a combination for writing and the like comprises ... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,918 | In 1971, Johannes F Gottwald patented the Liquid Metal Recorder, U.S. Patent 3596285A, a continuous inkjet metal material device to form a removable metal fabrication on a reusable surface for immediate use or salvaged for printing again by remelting. This appears to be the first patent describing 3D printing with rapi... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,919 | Computed axial lithography is a method for 3D printing based on computerised tomography scans to create prints in photo-curable resin. It was developed by a collaboration between the University of California, Berkeley with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Unlike other methods of 3D printing it does not build mod... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,920 | The entrance of the building was chosen due to the 3D printing limitations and the budget of the project for producing the maquette. 3D printing was only one of the capabilities enabled by the produced 3D model of the bank, but due to the project's limited scope, the team did not continue modelling for the virtual repr... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,921 | The application of 3D printing for the representation of architectural assets has many challenges. In 2018, the structure of Iran National Bank was traditionally surveyed and modeled in computer graphics software (specifically, Cinema4D) and was optimized for 3D printing. The team tested the technique for the construct... | 3D Printer | 0.776519 |
99,922 | The Manchester Astronomical Society is an organisation that promotes popular and amateur astronomy in North West England. It is one of the oldest provincial astronomical societies in England. The Society is based in the Godlee Observatory located in the Sackville Building, University of Manchester, in Manchester city c... | Manchester Astronomical Society | 0.776519 |
99,923 | Inventory data is imported and maintained from the schedule distribution system. Changes to aircraft availability would immediately impact the available seats of the fleet, as well as the seats which had been sold. The price for each sold seat is determined by a combination of the fares and booking conditions stored in... | Flight reservation system | 0.776518 |
99,924 | By the change of variables t = −ln s, this becomes the familiar Euler integral. Euler published his results in the paper "De progressionibus transcendentibus seu quarum termini generales algebraice dari nequeunt" ("On transcendental progressions, that is, those whose general terms cannot be given algebraically"), submi... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,925 | A more restrictive property than satisfying the above interpolation is to satisfy the recurrence relation defining a translated version of the factorial function, for any positive real number x. But this would allow for multiplication by any function g(x) satisfying both g(x) = g(x+1) for all real numbers x and g(0) = ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,926 | There are, relatively speaking, no such simple solutions for factorials; no finite combination of sums, products, powers, exponential functions, or logarithms will suffice to express x! ; but it is possible to find a general formula for factorials using tools such as integrals and limits from calculus. A good solution ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,927 | Using the pi function the reflection formula takes on the form where sinc is the normalized sinc function, while the multiplication theorem takes on the form We also sometimes find which is an entire function, defined for every complex number, just like the reciprocal gamma function. That π ( z ) {\displaystyle \pi (z)... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,928 | Double-precision floating-point implementations of the gamma function and its logarithm are now available in most scientific computing software and special functions libraries, for example TK Solver, Matlab, GNU Octave, and the GNU Scientific Library. The gamma function was also added to the C standard library (math.h)... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,929 | "There was in fact little practical need for anything but real values of the gamma function until the 1930s, when applications for the complex gamma function were discovered in theoretical physics. As electronic computers became available for the production of tables in the 1950s, several extensive tables for the compl... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,930 | The Bohr–Mollerup theorem states that among all functions extending the factorial functions to the positive real numbers, only the gamma function is log-convex, that is, its natural logarithm is convex on the positive real axis. Another characterisation is given by the Wielandt theorem. The gamma function is the unique... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,931 | However, these numbers Γ ( r ) {\displaystyle \Gamma (r)} are not known to be expressible by themselves in terms of elementary functions. It has been proved that Γ ( n + r ) {\displaystyle \Gamma (n+r)} is a transcendental number and algebraically independent of π {\displaystyle \pi } for any integer n {\displaystyle n... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,932 | !=(2n-1)(2n-3)\cdots (3)(1)} . See Particular values of the gamma function for calculated values. It might be tempting to generalize the result that Γ ( 1 2 ) = π {\textstyle \Gamma \left({\frac {1}{2}}\right)={\sqrt {\pi }}} by looking for a formula for other individual values Γ ( r ) {\displaystyle \Gamma (r)} where ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,933 | Other important functional equations for the gamma function are Euler's reflection formula which implies and the Legendre duplication formula The duplication formula is a special case of the multiplication theorem (see Eq. 5.5.6): A simple but useful property, which can be seen from the limit definition, is: In particu... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,934 | The Bohr–Mollerup theorem is useful because it is relatively easy to prove logarithmic convexity for any of the different formulas used to define the gamma function. Taking things further, instead of defining the gamma function by any particular formula, we can choose the conditions of the Bohr–Mollerup theorem as the ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,935 | A definite and generally applicable characterization of the gamma function was not given until 1922. Harald Bohr and Johannes Mollerup then proved what is known as the Bohr–Mollerup theorem: that the gamma function is the unique solution to the factorial recurrence relation that is positive and logarithmically convex f... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,936 | However, the gamma function does not appear to satisfy any simple differential equation. Otto Hölder proved in 1887 that the gamma function at least does not satisfy any algebraic differential equation by showing that a solution to such an equation could not satisfy the gamma function's recurrence formula, making it a ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,937 | Instead of finding a specialized proof for each formula, it would be desirable to have a general method of identifying the gamma function. One way to prove would be to find a differential equation that characterizes the gamma function. Most special functions in applied mathematics arise as solutions to differential equ... | Euler Gamma Function | 0.776518 |
99,938 | Infectious diseases spread across the globe usually because of long-distance travels of carriers of the disease. These long-distance travels are made using air transportation systems and it has been shown that "network topology, traffic structure, and individual mobility patterns are all essential for accurate predicti... | Individual mobility | 0.776518 |
99,939 | Some recent scientific studies compared the mobility patterns emerged from mobile phone data with those emerged from GPS data.Researchers have been able to extract very detailed information about the people whose data are made available to public. This has sparked a great amount of concern about privacy issues. As an e... | Individual mobility | 0.776518 |
99,940 | OGLE-2016-BLG-1195Lb is an extrasolar planet located about 22,000 light-years from Earth, in the galactic bulge, orbiting the 0.57±0.06M☉ star OGLE-2016-BLG-1195L, discovered in 2017. The planet was detected using gravitational microlensing techniques managed by the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute and the S... | OGLE-2016-BLG-1195Lb | 0.776517 |
99,941 | {\displaystyle L^{2}\left(X;L^{2}(Y)\right).} Tensor products of Hilbert spaces arise often in quantum mechanics. | Tensor product of Hilbert spaces | 0.776512 |
99,942 | The Hilbert tensor product H 1 ⊗ H 2 {\displaystyle H_{1}\otimes H_{2}} is characterized by the following universal property (Kadison & Ringrose 1997, Theorem 2.6.4): A weakly Hilbert-Schmidt mapping L: H 1 × H 2 → K {\displaystyle L:H_{1}\times H_{2}\to K} is defined as a bilinear map for which a real number d {\displ... | Tensor product of Hilbert spaces | 0.776512 |
99,943 | Since Hilbert spaces have inner products, one would like to introduce an inner product, and therefore a topology, on the tensor product that arises naturally from those of the factors. Let H 1 {\displaystyle H_{1}} and H 2 {\displaystyle H_{2}} be two Hilbert spaces with inner products ⟨ ⋅ , ⋅ ⟩ 1 {\displaystyle \langl... | Tensor product of Hilbert spaces | 0.776512 |
99,944 | This is exactly equal to the von Neumann algebra of bounded operators of H 1 ⊗ H 2 . {\displaystyle H_{1}\otimes H_{2}.} Unlike for Hilbert spaces, one may take infinite tensor products of von Neumann algebras, and for that matter C*-algebras of operators, without defining reference states. This is one advantage of the... | Tensor product of Hilbert spaces | 0.776512 |
99,945 | Let A i {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {A}}_{i}} be the von Neumann algebra of bounded operators on H i {\displaystyle H_{i}} for i = 1 , 2. {\displaystyle i=1,2.} Then the von Neumann tensor product of the von Neumann algebras is the strong completion of the set of all finite linear combinations of simple tensor products A... | Tensor product of Hilbert spaces | 0.776512 |
99,946 | Julian Steward's cultural ecology is considered a fusion of environmental determinism and Boas' historical approach. Steward felt it was neither nature nor culture that had the most impact on a population, but instead, the mode of subsistence used in a given environment. Anthropologist Roy Rappaport introduced the fiel... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,947 | Historical ecology is interdisciplinary in principle; at the same time, it borrows heavily from the rich intellectual history of environmental anthropology. Western scholars have known since the time of Plato that the history of environmental changes cannot be separated from human history. Several ideas have been used ... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,948 | Historical ecologists recognize that humans have had world-wide influences, impact landscape in dissimilar ways which increase or decrease species diversity, and that a holistic perspective is critical to be able to understand that system.Piecing together landscapes requires a sometimes difficult union between natural ... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,949 | Historical ecology is a research program that focuses on the interactions between humans and their environment over long-term periods of time, typically over the course of centuries. In order to carry out this work, historical ecologists synthesize long-series data collected by practitioners in diverse fields. Rather t... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,950 | The greater volume of people compelled the government to put pressure on farmers for increased agricultural production. Land managers no longer automatically eliminate the use of swidden fires, but rather the number of swidden fires that are set for government-sponsored agricultural purposes. The San Francisco Estuary ... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,951 | Historical ecology can use archaeological sites within this setting to study past successes and failures of indigenous peoples. The use of swidden fires in Laos is an example of historical ecology as used by current land managers in policy-making. Swidden fires were originally considered a source of habitat degradation... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,952 | This led to an increase in the frequency and strength of wildfires, thus initiating a need to develop proper prevention methods. Historical ecology focuses on the impact on landscapes through human-mediated disturbances, once such being anthropogenic fire. It is a fusion of ecological, geographical, anthropological, an... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,953 | Anthropogenic fire is a mechanism of human-mediated disturbance, defined within historical ecology as a means of altering the landscape in a way that better suits human needs. The most common form of anthropogenic fire is controlled burns, or broadcast burning, which people have employed for thousands of years. Forest ... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,954 | reef in the world. Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Historical Ecology (2008–present) seeks to collect relevant historical data on fishing, whaling, and trade of the furs of aquatic animals in order form a baseline for environmental restorations of the California, USA coast. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,955 | For example, Deevey used radiocarbon dating to reconcile biologists’ successions of plants and animals with the sequences of material culture and sites discovered by archaeologists.In the 1980s, members of the history department at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock organized a lecture series entitled "Historica... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,956 | The discipline has several sites of origins by researchers who shared a common interest in the problem of ecology and history, but with a diversity of approaches. Edward Smith Deevey, Jr. used the term in the 1960s to describe a methodology that had been in long development. Deevey wished to bring together the practice... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,957 | Soil management, or direct human interaction with the soil, is another mechanism of anthropogenic change studied by historical ecologists. Soil management can take place through rearranging soils, altering drainage patterns, and building large earthen formations. Consistent with the basic premises of historical ecology... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,958 | Humans have always transformed the landscapes they inhabit, however, and today there are no landscapes on Earth that have not been affected by humans in some way.Human alterations have occurred in different phases, including the period prior to industrialization. These changes have been studied through the archeologica... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,959 | There are many cases in which human-mediated disturbance increases biodiversity as landscapes transform over time. Historical ecology challenges the very notion of a pristine landscape, such as virgin rainforests. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,960 | Historical ecologists recognize that landscapes undergo continuous alteration over time and these modifications are part of that landscape's history. Historical ecology recognizes that there is a primary and a secondary succession that occurs in the landscape. These successions should be understood without a preconceiv... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,961 | These changes are due to multiple factors that contribute to the ever-changing landscape. Landscape ecology still focuses on areas defined as ecosystems. In this, the ecosystem perpetually returns to a state of equilibrium. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,962 | Sauer's pioneering 1925 paper "The Morphology of Landscape" is now fundamental to many disciplines and defines the domain. In this, the term landscape is used in a geographical sense to mean an arbitrarily selected section of reality; morphology means the conceptual and methodological processes for altering it. Hence t... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,963 | Landscapes have cultural meanings, for example, the sacredness in many cultures of burial grounds. This recognition of landscapes as forms of knowledge is central to historical ecology, which studies landscapes from an anthropocentric perspective.The idea of the cultural landscape is directly attributed to American geo... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,964 | While the ecosystem concept views the environment as always trying to return to a state of equilibrium, the landscape concept considers "landscape transformation" to be a process of evolution. Landscapes do not return to a state of equilibrium, but are palimpsests of successive disturbances over time. The use of "lands... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,965 | In historical ecology, the landscape is defined as an area of interaction between human culture and the non-human environment. The landscape is a perpetually changing, physical manifestation of history. Historical ecology revises the notion of the ecosystem and replaces it with the landscape. While an ecosystem is stat... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,966 | These revisions and related critiques of environmental anthropology undertook to take into account the temporal and spatial dimensions of history and cultures, rather than continuing to view populations as static. These critiques led to the development of historical ecology by revealing the need to consider the histori... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,967 | Studies in ecological anthropology borrow heavily from the natural sciences, in particular, the concept of the ecosystem from systems ecology. In this approach, also called systems theory, ecosystems are seen as self-regulating, and as returning to a state of equilibrium. This theory views human populations as static a... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,968 | The interdisciplinary nature of historical ecology would permit conservation biologists to create more effective and efficient landscape improvements. Reclamation and revegetation can use a historical perspective to determine what biota will be able to sustain large populations without threatening native biota of the l... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,969 | Replacement of an ecosystem would create an entirely new one. Revegetation involves new additions of biota into a landscape, not limited to the original inhabitants of an area. Each method can be enriched by the application of historical ecology and the past knowledge it supplies. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,970 | Restoration ecology restores sites to former function, structure, and components of biological diversity through active modification of the landscapes. Reclamation deals with shifting a degraded ecosystem back toward a higher value or use, but not necessarily to its original state. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,971 | Historical ecology can also aid in the goals of other fields of study. Conservation biology recognizes different types of land management processes, each attempting to maintain the landscape and biota in their present form. | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,972 | Through experience, many indigenous societies learned how to effectively alter their landscapes and biotic distributions. Modern societies, seeking to curtail the magnitude of their effects on the landscape, can use historical ecology to promote sustainability by learning from the past. Farmers in the Amazon region, fo... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,973 | Historical ecology involves an understanding of multiple fields of study such as archaeology and cultural history as well as ecological processes, species diversity, natural variability, and the impact of human-mediated disturbances. Having a broad understanding of landscapes allows historical ecology to be applied to ... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,974 | Historical ecologists postulate that landscape transformations have occurred throughout history, even before the dawn of western civilization. Human-mediated disturbances are predated by soil erosion and animals damming waterways which contributed to waterway transformations. Landscapes, in turn, were altered by waterw... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,975 | One example of an invasive species that has had a significant impact on the landscape is the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar). The foliage-feeding gypsy moth is originally from temperate Eurasia; it was intentionally brought to the United States by an entomologist in 1869. Many specimens escaped from captivity and have si... | Historical ecology | 0.776512 |
99,976 | In physics, quantum acoustics is the study of sound under conditions such that quantum mechanical effects are relevant. For most applications, classical mechanics are sufficient to accurately describe the physics of sound. However very high frequency sounds, or sounds made at very low temperatures may be subject to qua... | Quantum acoustics | 0.776512 |
99,977 | This indicates that by correctly influencing these pathways, it is theoretically possible to alter lifespan and healthspan in humans. 2017 AgeX Therapeutics, a biotechnology company focused on medical therapeutics related to longevity, was founded. 2018 The Nobel Prize for cancer research was awarded to James Allison a... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,978 | 2007 First evidence that a pharmacological agent (namely, metformin) at a certain dosage is capable to increase the lifespan of mice. 2008 Foundation of the Max Planck Institute for Biology of Ageing. 2008 (approximately) It was observed that different variants of FOXO3 gene are associated with human longevity. | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,979 | Among the most notable researchers who worked in this direction, there were Alexis Carrel (who developed the technology of anastomosis of blood vessels and advanced asepsis, a Nobel laureate of 1912), Mathieu Jaboulay, Emerich Ullmann, Jacques Loeb, John Northrop, Porfiry Bakhmetiev. And although such interventions wer... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,980 | 1998 Scientists managed to extend, in a laboratory environment, the life of normal human cells beyond the Hayflick limit using telomerase. 1999 Establishment of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging – the first institute originally established primarily to study intervention into the aging process. 1999 Sierra Scien... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,981 | The discovery was a revolutionary breakthrough in aging research, demonstrating that the aging process could be controlled in the laboratory, and sparked more research into the molecular biology of aging. 1995 Method for detection of senescent cells using a cytochemical assay. 1997 The absolute record for the duration ... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,982 | During centuries alchemy gradually transformed to chemistry, in parallel giving birth to many adjacent sciences or enriching them. It is worth noticing the direction of iatrochemistry – a rational direction of alchemy with the main goal of preparing medicinal products. The pioneers of iatrochemistry were Paracelsus (14... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,983 | A study published a few days later identifies circadian-regulated autophagy as a critical contributor to intermittent time-restricted fasting-mediated lifespan extension in Drosophila and suggests that only certain forms of and/or combinations with intermittent fasting – intervals during which no food but only e.g. wat... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,984 | Ora Biomedical announces the "million molecule challenge", an effort to assess 1 million potential longevity interventions within five years using artificial intelligence. A study suggests chemical alternatives to age reversal via Yamanaka factors gene therapy are feasible via early in vitro fibroblasts data. These res... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,985 | Chemical intervention-related results First senolytics discovered using artificial intelligence: Teams from the University of Edinburgh and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology independently report the discovery of senolytics using artificial intelligence for screening large chemical libraries. The works reported ... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,986 | In a preprint, another team of researchers of the biotechnology company Rejuvenate Bio also reports the use of Yamanaka-reprogramming to modestly extend the lives of elderly mice. However, if it was also applicable to humans, risks may include the formation of cancer. In July, the David Sinclair team at Harvard Medical... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,987 | Nutrition-related results A study reports results of the first longevity caloric restriction (CR) trial, CALERIE, finding that two years of nonintermittent CR slowed the pace of aging as measured by one of three aging clocks (modest DunedinPACE effects). Development and application of aging clocks and combination thera... | Timeline of aging research | 0.776509 |
99,988 | SOCl2 adopts a trigonal pyramidal molecular geometry with Cs molecular symmetry. This geometry is attributed to the effects of the lone pair on the central sulfur(IV) center. In the solid state SOCl2 forms monoclinic crystals with the space group P21/c. | Cl2OS | 0.776508 |
99,989 | Later, Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet and Bernhard Riemann expressed Fourier's results with greater precision and formality. Although the original motivation was to solve the heat equation, it later became obvious that the same techniques could be applied to a wide array of mathematical and physical problems, and espec... | Fourier Series | 0.776506 |
99,990 | Vijay Kumar (born 12 April 1962) is an Indian roboticist and UPS foundation professor in the School of Engineering & Applied Science with secondary appointments in computer and information science and electrical and systems engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, and became the new Dean of Penn Engineering on 1 ... | Vijay Kumar (roboticist) | 0.776505 |
99,991 | B.Tech., Mechanical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India, May 1983 M.Sc., Mechanical Engineering, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, March 1988 Ph.D., Mechanical Engineering, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, September 1987 | Vijay Kumar (roboticist) | 0.776505 |
99,992 | The Ohio State University Presidential Fellowship (1986) NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award (1991) Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, University of Pennsylvania (1996) The Ferdinand Freudenstein Award for significant contributions to mechanisms and robotics awarded at the 5th National Conference on Mecha... | Vijay Kumar (roboticist) | 0.776505 |
99,993 | One of the applications of polyimines is as in covalent adaptable networks (CANs). These are polymer materials that are crosslinked via dynamic covalent bonds. Besides polyimines, other types of dynamic covalent chemistry can also be used. Polyimine CANs are largely investigated to create recyclable and self-healing th... | Polyimine | 0.776505 |
99,994 | P. Kiss; F. Mátyás (1989). "An asymptotic formula for". Journal of Number Theory. | Péter Kiss (mathematician) | 0.776504 |
99,995 | He was born in Nagyréde, Hungary, in 1937. He majored in Mathematics and Physics from Eötvös Loránd University. After graduation, he taught mathematics at Gárdonyi Géza Secondary School in Eger. In 1971 he was appointed to Teacher's College, and in 1972 he began teaching at the Department of Mathematics of Eszterházy K... | Péter Kiss (mathematician) | 0.776504 |
99,996 | Péter Kiss ((1937-03-05)March 5, 1937 – (2002-03-05)March 5, 2002) was a Hungarian mathematician, Doctor of Mathematics, and professor of mathematics at Eszterházy Károly College, who specialized in number theory. In 1992 he won the Albert Szent-Györgyi Prize for his achievements. | Péter Kiss (mathematician) | 0.776504 |
99,997 | The MacLean Center worked for two years with transplant experts at the University of Chicago to review the ethical issues, publish protocols, and encourage professional discussion of the procedure before it was first performed on a patient. The MacLean Center’s transplant work is one example of the wide range of ethics... | MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics | 0.776502 |
99,998 | Lefschetz presented his fixed-point theorem in (Lefschetz 1926). Lefschetz's focus was not on fixed points of maps, but rather on what are now called coincidence points of maps. Given two maps f {\displaystyle f} and g {\displaystyle g} from an orientable manifold X {\displaystyle X} to an orientable manifold Y {\displ... | Lefschetz fixed-point formula | 0.776502 |
99,999 | For a formal statement of the theorem, let f: X → X {\displaystyle f\colon X\rightarrow X\,} be a continuous map from a compact triangulable space X {\displaystyle X} to itself. Define the Lefschetz number Λ f {\displaystyle \Lambda _{f}} of f {\displaystyle f} by Λ f := ∑ k ≥ 0 ( − 1 ) k t r ( f ∗ | H k ( X , Q ) ) , ... | Lefschetz fixed-point formula | 0.776502 |
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